Prvi glas Srbije

Prvi Glas Srbije (English: The First Voice of Serbia) is a Serbian television music competition that debuted on Prva Srpska Televizija in 2011. So far, two seasons have been broadcast.

Prvi glas Srbije
The First Voice of Serbia
Also known asRise or Fall
GenreReality television
Presented byAndrija Milošević
Marija Kilibarda
JudgesVlado Georgiev (2011-2012)
Saša Milošević Mare (2011-2012)
Aleksandra Radović (2012)
Lena Kovačević (2011)
Country of originSerbia
Original language(s)Serbian
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes39
Production
Running time60 minutes (auditions)
120-240 minutes (finals)
DistributorGlobal Agency
Release
Original networkPRVA
Picture format16:9
Original releaseSeptember 10, 2011 (2011-09-10) 
January 20, 2013 (2013-01-20)
External links
Website

Format

The concept is that an auditionee performs in front of three judges. After an act performs, the judges give comments and depending on how they feel about the performance, they press a button that lights a red or a green light. If an acts gets two or three green lights, they advance to the next phase of the competition, but if they get two or more red lights, a trapdoor opens and the auditionee falls through it, which also ends their time on the show. After the auditions are done, judges call all of the contestants who have gone through to perform again to select more acts that will advance in the competition. After this, judges figure out who will go to the next phase and who can mentor and get the best out of them. At this phase, acts are divided in groups and perform in front of their mentors.

The judging panel is Vlado Georgiev, Aleksandra Radović and Saša Milošević, with Andrija Milošević and Marija Kilibarda as presenters.

Series Series premiere Series finale Winner
1 9 September 2011 26 December 2011 Davor Jovanović
2 21 August 2012 20 January 2013 Mirna Radulović
gollark: I... see.
gollark: Invading people's privacy a lot allows you to get somewhat closer to "perfect enforcement".
gollark: Anyway, broadly speaking, governments *cannot* perfectly enforce their laws, and this is part of the reason they work generally somewhat okay. If they could *immediately* go from "government doesn't/does think you could do X" to "you can no longer do/not do X without punishment", we would likely have significantly less fair institutions.
gollark: The UK has some of the world's most ridiculously broad government surveillance laws.
gollark: That's from 7 years ago, so presumably it's worse now.

References

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